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emawritz/README.md

Emanuel Cejas

I help solo developers work like a team.

Building AI tools that multiply what one person can ship.

Twitter LinkedIn JARVIS


Hey 👋

I'm a self-taught software engineer from Buenos Aires.

No bootcamp. No university. My grandfather taught me that you can't understand something until you've taken it apart — so I took everything apart.

I started with HTML in 2021. First clients in 2022. First real apps in 2023. By 2024 I was building a full SaaS from scratch, alone.

Then AI arrived and changed the game entirely.


The problem I couldn't ignore

Most devs using AI have one machine, one context, one agent at a time.

I had four machines sitting there — a Mac Mini M4 Pro, two high-end PCs, a laptop. And I kept thinking: what if Tony Stark didn't just have one JARVIS instance? What if all of them worked in parallel?

That's what I built.

ATLAS (Mac Mini M4 Pro)  ──────── orchestrator
    ├── NOVA  (i5 + RTX 3060, Windows)   ──  backend agent
    ├── PIXEL (Ryzen 7 + RTX 3070, Linux) ── frontend agent
    └── NOMAD (Ryzen 7, mobile)           ──  backup / overflow

Four machines. Two Claude accounts. Real-time coordination via SSH + Tailscale. Parallel agents that actually sync between rounds.

No API costs. No cloud dependency. 100% yours.

JARVIS — jarvis-490206.web.app/es


Why I built this for others too

The companies don't want self-taught developers. I know because I've sent the applications.

There are thousands of skilled devs locked out of the market — not because they can't build, but because they don't have the right credentials on paper.

JARVIS is my answer to that. If you can't get hired by a team, become the team. The tools exist. You just need to know how to wire them together.

Everything I learned building this is open source.


What else I'm building

LocalCenter — A business management SaaS for Argentine companies. AFIP integration, SQL Server, Angular. Full stack, end to end, solo. The kind of project that teaches you what no tutorial ever will.


Stack

Area Technologies
Backend Node.js TypeScript SQL Server
Frontend Angular 17 Svelte 5 Tailwind
Desktop Tauri 2 Rust
AI Claude Code multi-agent orchestration
Infra SSH Tailscale Linux Windows macOS

GitHub Stats

Emanuel's GitHub stats

Top Languages

GitHub Streak


The journey

2021  →  First HTML/CSS/JS. Learning by breaking things.
2022  →  First clients. Real deadlines. Real pressure.
2023  →  TypeScript, databases. First apps people actually used.
2024  →  Full stack SaaS. Building LocalCenter from scratch.
2025  →  Claude Code. AI changes how I work. Forever.
2026  →  Rust. JARVIS. 4 machines. 1 developer. Team output.

How I think

I don't start with the stack. I start with the problem.

The stack is a consequence — it adapts to what needs to be built and how fast it needs to exist. I'm not less technical because of this. I'm technical with direction. There's a difference between knowing every API by heart and knowing exactly what to build and why.

With AI, the ceiling for solo developers got a lot higher. But what actually separates people isn't who knows more syntax — it's who can look at a real need, design the right solution, and make it exist. That's closer to an architect than a coder.

No barriers. No "I don't know that language." Just: what needs to exist, and how do I make it exist?


What I believe

  • A solo developer with good tools can out-ship a team with bad ones
  • Self-taught isn't a limitation — it's a different kind of education
  • The best way to learn something is to build something people actually use
  • AI doesn't replace developers. It multiplies the ones who know how to use it.

"The developers who learn to work in fleets are going to win."

Buenos Aires, Argentina 🇦🇷

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